Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
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know how you feel. I'm just as frustrated. But our
hands are tied.'
They stood in silence for a while watching an
old man lead a camel down the road beneath
them. Daniel turned towards the hills again, eyes
flicking back and forth across the undulating wall
of rock, lost in thought. Suddenly, as if coming to
a decision, he took her hand and pulled her back
towards the stairs.
'Come on. It might not solve all our problems
but at least it'll give us something to do.'
'Where are we going?'
'There.' He pointed to a flat ridge running like
a blade across the top of the hills. 'There's no
better place in Egypt to watch the sunset.'
They started down the stairs.
'And you'd better bring the box with you,' he
said.
'Why? Are you worried Omar might steal it?'
'No. I just don't want him killed because of it.
It's our problem, Tara. We should keep it with
us.'
It took them the best part of an hour to reach the
top of the ridge, following first a set of concrete
steps and then, when these petered out, a steep,
dusty path that zigzagged its way upwards before
eventually carrying them through a narrow gully
and out onto the summit of the hills. It had been a
hard climb and by the end of it they were both
drenched in sweat. They stood for a moment
catching their breath, then Daniel sat down on a
large rock and lit a cheroot, tapping his fingers on
his thigh as if waiting for someone. Tara removed
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her knapsack and clambered up above him, awed
by the extraordinary views: the setting sun, huge
and red, a vast jewel suspended against the
turquoise sky; the distant silver ribbon of the Nile,
shimmering in the afternoon haze; the endless
rippling hills, silent and empty and mysterious.
'They call this peak el-Qurn,' said Daniel, 'the
horn. From most directions it just looks like a
ridge running across the top of the hills. If you
view it from the north, however, from the Valley
of the Kings, it's shaped like a pyramid. The
ancient Egyptians called it Dehenet. The brow. It's
the reason they first chose the valley as a burial
ground.'
'It's so peaceful,' said Tara.
'They thought the same three and a half
thousand years ago. The peak was sacred to the
goddess Meret-Seger: "She who loves Silence".'
He came to his feet, glancing briefly back down
the way they had come before climbing up beside
her.
'Look there,' he said, pointing, 'that rectangular
enclosure, there, to the right: that's Medinet Habu,
the mortuary temple of Ramesses III. One of the
most beautiful monuments in Egypt. And then
over there, where those palm trees are, that's
Omar's house. Do you see it?'
She peered downwards, following the line of his
finger. 'I think so.'
'And then, if you move to the left, where that
road is, the one going down to the river, those are
the Colossi of Memnon. And if you keep going
to the left' – he leaned into her so that their cheeks
were practically touching – 'to where that
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complex of buildings is, that's the Ramesseum,
Ramesses II's mortuary temple.'
She could feel his breath against her ear and
leaned back a little, looking up at him. There was
something troubled in his eyes, a reflection of
some inner disturbance.
'What?' she asked.
'I . . .' He paused, unable to find the words. His
eyes dropped.
'What, Daniel?'
'I wanted to . . .'
There was a sudden scrabbling noise behind
them. They swung round and there, framed by the
sides of the gully up which they had climbed a few
minutes earlier, was a wild, unkempt-looking face
with sunken cheeks and haunted, bloodshot eyes.
'For Christ's sake,' muttered Daniel.
'Hello please, hello please!' gabbled the new-
comer, heaving himself a little further up the gully
to reveal a djellaba so torn and tattered it was a
miracle it held together at all. 'Wait, wait, wait, I
show you something very good. Here, here, see.'
Coming out onto the top of the ridge he hurried
over to them and extended a skeletal hand, in which
he was holding a large scarab carved in black stone.
'I see you come up,' he jabbered. 'Very long
way. Very long. Here, look, look, best workman-
ship. Very, very good how much you give me.'
'La,'
said Daniel, shaking his head.
'Mish del-
wa'tee.
Not now.'
'Quality, quality! Please, how much you give.'
'Ana mish aayiz.
I don't want it.'
'Price, price. Give price. Twenty Egyptian
pounds. So cheap.'
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'La,'
repeated Daniel, his voice harsh.
'Ana
mish aayiz.'
'Fifteen. Ten.'
Daniel shook his head.
'Antika,'
said the man, lowering his voice. 'I
have
antika.
You want look. Very good. Very real.'
'La,'
said Daniel firmly.
'Imshi.
Go away.'
The man was getting desperate. He pawed at
their feet.
'Good people. Good people. Try understand.
No money, no food, starve, starve, like dog.' He
threw his head back and let out a sudden, ear-
splitting howl. 'See,' he jabbered. 'I am dog. Not
man. Dog. Animal. Dog.' Another howl.
'Khalas!'
growled Daniel. 'Enough!'
He reached into his pocket and pulled out some
notes, which he handed to the man, who took
them, his sobs giving way to a wide, brown-
toothed smile. He broke into a clumsy jig, hopping
around the mountain top.
'Good man good man good man,' he sang. 'My
friend so very good to me.' He looked up at Tara
as he gambolled beneath her. 'Beautiful lady, you
want see tombs? You want see Hatshepsut? Kings
Valley. Queens Valley. Special tombs. Secret
tombs. I be guide. Very cheap.'
'That's enough,' said Daniel. 'You've got your
baksheesh. Go.
Imshi!'
'But I show you many special things. Many
secrets.'
'Imshi!'
The man stopped dancing and, with a shrug,
moved back towards the gully, fingering his
money and muttering to himself.
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'Money, go, money, go, money, go.'
He dropped into the narrow defile and lowered
himself downwards. When all that was left was his
head, however, he turned suddenly, looking Tara
straight in the eyes.
'It's not what you think it is,' he said simply, his
voice suddenly calm and lucid. 'The ghosts tell me
to tell you. It's not what you think it is. There are
many lies.'
And then he dropped out of sight and all that
could be heard was the hiss of stones as he
scrambled back down the mountainside.
'What did he mean?' she asked, inexplicably
chilled by the man's words. 'It's not what we think
it is?'
'God knows,' said Daniel. He jumped from the
rock and walked to the front of the ridge, gazing
down at the Valley of the Kings below. 'He's
obviously mad, poor bastard. He looked like he
hadn't eaten for a month.'
They stood in silence, Daniel looking down at
the valley, Tara looking down at Daniel.
'You had something to tell me,' she said
eventually.
'Hmm?' He looked back at her. 'Oh, it doesn't
matter. Come and look. It's the best time of day to
see the valley, when it's empty. Like it must have
been in ancient times.'
She jumped down and came to his side, their
fingers brushing lightly. Below them the wadi was
silent and deserted, its tributary valleys branching
off it like the fingers of a splayed hand.
'Where's Tutankhamun's tomb?' she asked.
He pointed. 'You see where the valley
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bottlenecks, in the middle. And then just to the left
there's the outline of a doorway in the hillside.
That's KV9, the tomb of Ramesses VI.
Tutankhamun's just beyond that.'
'And your site?'
There was a slight beat before he answered.
'You can't see it from here. It's further up the
valley, towards Tuthmosis III.'
'I remember coming here with Mum and Dad
once,' said Tara, 'when I was a kid. Dad was
lecturing on a Nile cruise and we got to go along
as well. He was so excited taking us into all the
tombs, but I just wanted to get back to the boat
and go in the pool. I think that's when he realized
I wasn't going to be the daughter he wanted.'
Daniel looked across at her. He moved his
shoulder slightly, as though he was going to take
her hand. He didn't, however, and after a moment
he looked away again, finishing his cheroot and
flicking it aside.
'Your father loved you very much, Tara,' he said
quietly.
She shrugged. 'Whatever.'
'Believe me, Tara, he loved you. Some people
just find it hard to say these things. To say what
they feel.'
And then, suddenly, he
was
holding her hand.
Neither of them said anything, neither of them
moved, as though the contact between them was
so fragile it would shatter at the least twitch. The
sun was below the horizon now and the light was
starting to drain away. A couple of stars were out
and on the plain beneath house lights were start-
ing to come on. Opposite, on a distant saddle of
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rock, they could just make out a couple of soldiers
moving around outside a hut, one of the string of
guard posts set up across the hills after the Deir el-
Bahri massacre. The wind was gusting harder.
'Is there anyone else?' she asked quietly.
'Lovers?' He smiled. 'Not really, no. There have
been. But no-one . . .' He searched for the right
adjective. '. . . meaningful. You?'
'The same.'
She paused and then asked, 'Who's Mary?' She
hadn't wanted to, but couldn't stop herself.
'Mary?'
'Last night, when you were asleep, you kept say-
ing her name.'
'I don't know a Mary.'
He seemed genuinely baffled.
'You said it over and over again. Mary some-
thing. Mary. Mary.'
He thought for a moment, repeating the name
to himself, and then suddenly rocked back on his
heels and burst out laughing.
'Mary! Oh that's wonderful! Were you jealous,
Tara? Tell me you were jealous!'
'No,' she said defensively. 'Just interested.'
'For God's sake!
Mery.
That's what I was say-
ing. Not Mary.
Mery. Mery-amun.
Beloved of
Amun. Nothing for you to worry about, I
promise. She's a man, after all, and one who's been
dead for two and a half thousand years.'
He was still laughing, and now Tara joined in as
well, embarrassed by her mistake but pleased too.
His hand tightened on hers, hers on his, and then,
before either of them really knew what was
happening, he had swung her round and kissed her.
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For a second she resisted, a voice in her head
warning that he was dangerous, would hurt her
again. It was no more than a second, however, and
then she opened her mouth, threw her arms
around him and pulled him close, needing him,
despite what he had done to her, or perhaps
because of it. His hands caressed her neck and
back, her breasts pushed urgently against his
chest. She had forgotten how good he felt.
She didn't know how long they stayed like that,
but when, finally, they pulled apart it was to dis-
cover that the world around them had suddenly
darkened. They sat down on a rock and he
wrapped her in his arms against the wind. Away to
their right a chain of lights snaked up the
mountainside, marking the concrete path up
which they had climbed earlier. More lights were
twinkling on the plain beneath, white for the most
part, but with the occasional green glint marking
the minaret of a mosque.
'So who is this Mary?' she asked, nestling her
face into his shoulder.
He smiled. 'A son of the Pharaoh Amasis. Prince
Mery-amun Sehetep-ib-re. Lived about 550 BC. I
have this pet theory that he was buried in the
Valley of the Kings. It's what I've been doing here
for the last five years. Trying to find him. I'm con-
vinced his tomb's still intact.'
He pulled another cheroot from his shirt
pocket, leaning back behind her to shelter his
lighter from the wind.
'So when do you start digging again?' she asked.
He hunched forward and dragged on the
cheroot, exhaling slowly, allowing the wind to
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catch the smoke and pull it away from him like a
tattered ribbon. There was a long pause. When he
spoke again his voice had changed. Suddenly there
was an edge of bitterness to it, of resentment.
'I don't start digging again.'